Women are turning their backs on David Cameron’s posh Tory Party, a poll shows today.

The Conservatives now trail way behind Labour among female voters, who said they preferred the PM’s party in surveys before the 2010 election.

Today’s poll found 42% of women now back Labour, compared with just 29% for the Tories and 11% for their Lib Dem Coalition partners. Among women aged 18-34 Labour are 25 points ahead.

And 46% of female voters say Cameron is the most out-of-touch, compared with 13% for Labour leader Ed ­Miliband and 9% for Lib Dem Nick Clegg.

Labour said the Conservatives were paying the price for policies that hit women such as cutting child benefit and closing Sure Start centres.

The Tories’ collapse in support among women follows growing evidence that Government cuts hit them hardest.

More than £11billion of the £16billion reduction in spending and welfare by Chancellor George Osborne has fallen on women.

They have also suffered most in the cull of public sector jobs.

Justine Roberts, founder of Mumsnet which commissioned the poll, said women were turning against Eton-educated Cameron because he seemed out of touch.

She said: “On the key issues of the economy and employment, and particularly where the cuts have fallen, women feel there is a lack of someone looking out for their interests. One bit of the narrative that stands up is this elitist Oxbridge-Eton man who doesn’t get women.”

The poll, conducted by Ipsos MORI, also has bad news for Mr Clegg, with six out of 10 women who backed the Lib Dems in 2010 no longer supporting them.